A young man wears a hat with a Brazilian flag and fake birds during a climate change protest in Rio de Janeiro, Sunday, September 27, 2009.

Venezuela and Brazil agreed Saturday to meet prior to an upcoming U.N. conference on climate change to define a joint position regarding their rain forests.

Photo: AP/Silvia Izquierdo

Thursday, 24 January 2008

Brazil sees record deforestation

The Amazon has long been known as the "lungs of the world"

The Brazilian government has announced a record rate of deforestation in the Amazon, months after celebrating its success in achieving a reduction.

In the last five months of 2007, 3,000 sq km (1,250 sq miles) were lost.

Gilberto Camara, whose National Institute of Space Research provides satellite imaging of the Amazon, said the figure was unprecedented.

"We've never before detected such a high deforestation rate at this time of year," he said.

His concern, outlined during a press conference in Brasilia on Wednesday, was echoed by Environment Minister Marina Silva.

Soya expensive

Ms Silva said the rise in the price of commodities such as soya could have influenced the rate of forest clearing, as more and more farmers saw the Amazon as a source of cheap land.

"The economic reality of these states indicate that these activities impact, without a shadow of a doubt, on the forest," she said.

The state of Mato Grosso was the worst affected, contributing more than half the total area of forest stripped, or 1,786 sq km (700 sq miles).

President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva is expected to attend an emergency meeting on the issue.

The rise in deforestation will be an embarrassment for the Brazilian president, who last year said his government's efforts to control illegal logging and introduce better certification of land ownership had helped reduce forest clearance significantly.

Even as he celebrated the success, though, environmentalists were warning that the rate was rising again.

The situation may also be worse than reported, with the environment ministry saying the preliminary assessment of the amount of forest cleared could double as more detailed satellite images are analysed.

MMVIII

1645 hectares

Santarem, Amazon

Illegally logged to clear land for soya plantations

A huge area of 1645 hectares in Gleba do Pacoval, 100km from Santarem, Amazon, illegally logged to clear land for soya plantations.

Photo: Greenpeace

Burning Amazon

Aerial view of the rainforest during the burning season in the Amazon, photographed during a flight from Itaituba to Alta Floresta.

The Brazilian government has announced a record rate of deforestation in the Amazon, months after celebrating its success in achieving a reduction.

Photo: Greenpeace

Thursday, 4 October 2007

'Unknown' Peru Amazon tribe seen

Logging is forcing tribes deeper into the jungle.

A previously unknown indigenous group living in isolation has been found deep in Peru's Amazon jungle, a team of ecologists has said.

The ecologists spotted the 21 Indians near the Brazilian border as they flew overhead looking for illegal loggers.

Contact with outsiders can be fatal for isolated tribes people who have no immunity to many diseases.

Some groups have fled deep into the jungle to avoid contact with loggers and oil and gas prospectors.

Nomadic group

The group was photographed and filmed from the air on the banks of the Las Piedras River in Peru's south-eastern Amazon region.

A government official who was on the flight said there were three palm huts on the river bank.

"We've found five other sites with this kind of shelter along the same river," Ricardo Hon told Associated Press news agency. "This group is nomadic."

He said the government had no plans to try to find the tribe again.

The steady advance of logging has forced the isolated groups, among them the Mashco-Piro and Yora tribes, deeper into Peru's jungle frontier with Brazil and Bolivia.

Indigenous leaders say tribes have suffered many deaths from diseases contracted from outsiders.

A pan-American human rights group criticised Peru's government this year for doing little to protect the groups from illegal loggers who are chopping down the mahogany-rich forests in which they live.

MMVII

Logs cut from virginAmazon rainforest

Logs cut from virgin Amazon rainforest lie ready to be fed into charcoal ovens, outside the town of Ulianopolis, Brazil, July 5, 2007.

Brazil's environment minister said on Wednesday the international community was failing to honor pledges to help protect the Amazon and other tropical forests but that her government rejected specific deforestation targets.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

Photo: Paulo Santos/Reuters

Little-known nomadic Indigenous tribe

Madre De Dios rainforest

bank of Las Piedras river

Peru Amazon

Members of an Indigenous Aboriginal tribe are seen on a bank of a river in the jungle of Madre De Dios September 18, 2007.

A little-known nomadic Indian tribe has been spotted by ecologists in Peru's Amazon rainforest, carrying arrows for bows and staying in huts made of palm leaves on a bank of the Las Piedras river.

21 of the indigenous tribe are seen near the Brazilian border as a plane flew overhead looking for illegal loggers.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

Photo: Handout

Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway into dying Amazon for Mulitnational Corporations.

Much of the world's soya production goes to feed animals living in unspeakable horror in intensive farming compounds.

Animals kept in intensive farming sheds, in essence tortured all their life until killed for eating by humans.

Soybean production for intensive farmed animal eating is also destroying the remaining large rainforest of Earth, the Sumatra Indonesia rainforest.

Huts made of palm leaves

Huts made of palm leaves are seen on the bank of a river in the jungle of Madre De Dios September 18, 2007.

A little-known nomadic Indian tribe has been spotted by ecologists in Peru's Amazon rainforest, carrying arrows for bows and staying in huts made of palm leaves on a bank of the Las Piedras river.

21 of the indigenous tribe are seen near the Brazilian border as a plane flew overhead looking for illegal loggers.

Brazil's environment minister said on Wednesday the international community was failing to honor pledges to help protect the Amazon and other tropical forests but that her government rejected specific deforestation targets.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

Photo: Handout

Logs cut from virgin Amazon rainforest

1,200 ovens used to turn the wood into charcoal, town of Ulianopolis in Para state

Logs cut from virgin Amazon rainforest lie next to the nearly 1,200 ovens used to turn the wood into charcoal for use in iron smelters and for home use, just outside the town of Ulianopolis in Para state July 5, 2007.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

More wood was removed from forests in 2005 than ever before, one of many troubling environmental signs highlighted on Thursday in the Worldwatch Institute's annual check of the planet's health.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

That represented a slight slowing in the rate of destruction from the year before  a trend experts attribute to the weakening of soy bean prices and the strengthening of Brazil's currency on world markets.

Much of the world's soya production goes to feed animals living in unspeakable horror in intensive farming compounds.

Animals kept in intensive farming sheds, in essence tortured all their life until killed for eating by humans.

Soybean production for intensive farmed animal eating is also destroying the remaining large rainforest of Earth, the Sumatra Indonesia rainforests.

Photo: Paulo Santos/Reuters

Bank of river in jungle of Madre De Dios

Nomadic indigenous tribe

A group of huts made of palm leaves are seen on the bank of a river in the jungle of Madre De Dios September 18, 2007.

A little-known nomadic indigenous tribe has been spotted in Peru's Amazon rainforest, carrying arrows for bows and staying in huts made of palm leaves on a bank of the Las Piedras river.

Contact with outsiders can be fatal for isolated tribes people who have no immunity to many diseases.

Some groups have fled deep into the jungle to avoid contact with loggers and oil and gas prospectors.

Photographed and filmed from the air on the banks of the Las Piedras River in Peru's south-eastern Amazon region, a government official who was on the flight said there were three palm huts on the river bank.

"We've found five other sites with this kind of shelter along the same river," Ricardo Hon told Associated Press news agency. "This group is nomadic."

He said the government had no plans to try to find the tribe again.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

Photo: REUTERS/Gregg Newton

Greens hail landmark victory in fight to save Amazon rainforests

By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles Published: 26 March 2007

One of the world's largest agribusiness giants was forced to close a soy export terminal in Brazil's Amazon region this weekend, marking a major victory for environmentalists who have argued for years that the plant was built illegally and became a significant cause of rainforest depletion.

Brazilian police and environmental officers swooped on the Cargill terminal in Santarem, a deep-water port in the lower Amazon about 850 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean. They said they met no resistance as they set about closing operations.

On Friday, a Brazilian judge ruled that Cargill - a US multinational that posted more than $70bn (£36bn) in revenues last year - had failed to submit a legally required environmental impact assessment when it built the terminal in the first few years of this decade.

It was not the first time the courts had ruled against Cargill on the question, but the company had never previously been forced to suspend its operations.

The Santarem terminal has been the target of a Greenpeace environmental protection campaign from the day it opened in 2003.

A Greenpeace report last year, entitled "Eating Up the Amazon", accused Cargill of being directly or indirectly responsible for slave labour, illegal land grabs and deforestation at a rate of six football pitches per minute.

"A big step forward has been taken in enforcing the responsible use of natural resources and bringing greater governance in the Amazon," he said.

Cargill, which argues it is an important engine of economic growth in an impoverished region, said it would appeal the ruling which it said was based on a misunderstanding about who  the state of Para or the Brazilian federal government  needs to sanction environmental impact reports for big projects.

"When we built the facility, the permits were issued by the state," a Cargill spokeswoman, Lori Johnson, told the Associated Press.

"Since that time the federal prosecutor has said we should have done another kind of environmental assessment, and that is the issue before the courts."

The chief prosecutor in the Cargill case, Felicio Pontes, has sided with Greenpeace in seeing the Santarem terminal as illegal.

"Cargill believed that because they were a powerful multinational, they could disrespect both Brazilian legislation and the environment," he said.

Since the Santarem terminal opened, land prices in the region have jumped 18-fold, prompting many landowners to sell to Cargill and other soy-growing multinationals, and spurring a major leap in soy production.

Millions of acres of rainforest have been turned over to soy bean fields.

The soy is used principally to supply European livestock farms.

Cargill argues that soy production covers only 6 per cent of the Amazon area - a price it believes is worth paying for one of Brazil's key export crops.

Brazil is the world's second largest producer after the US.

The Brazilian government appears to agree, and is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

That represented a slight slowing in the rate of destruction from the year before  a trend experts attribute to the weakening of soy bean prices and the strengthening of Brazil's currency on world markets.

5000 species of fish many not yet described and likely to become extinct live in rivers and streams in the Amazon

(left)

A labourer prepares fresh river fish for sale at Manaus fish market in the capital of the state of Amazonas March 13, 2007.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

(right)

Indigenous Bolivians from the Amazon region perform during a ceremony in the flood-ravaged city of Trinidad, Beni some 400 km (248 miles) northeast of the Bolivian capital La Paz, March 10, 2007.

The worst flooding in a quarter century in Bolivia's Amazon plain has taken place February and March 2007.

Some 40 percent of Beni, which was the hardest hit region in Bolivia, has been under water, and the Bolivian govenment is struggling to deliver aid to remote areas.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

That represented a slight slowing in the rate of destruction from the year before  a trend experts attribute to the weakening of soy bean prices and the strengthening of Brazil's currency on world markets.

Much of the world's soya production goes to feed animals living in unspeakable horror in intensive farming compounds.

Animals kept in intensive farming sheds, in essence tortured all their life until killed for eating by humans.

Soybean production for intensive farmed animal eating is also destroying the remaining large rainforest of Earth, the Sumatra Indonesia rainforests.

Photos: REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker, REUTERS/David Mercado

Negro river in Manausnorthern Brazil state of Amazon

Steamer boat fueled by oil on the Negro river in Manaus in the northern Brazilian state of Amazon March 12, 2007.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

Photo: REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker

Unloading fresh fish at the port of Manaus in the capital of the state of Amazonas

River boats unload fresh fish at the port of Manaus in the capital of the state of Amazonas March 14, 2007.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

That represented a slight slowing in the rate of destruction from the year before  a trend experts attribute to the weakening of soy bean prices and the strengthening of Brazil's currency on world markets.

Much of the world's soya production goes to feed animals living in unspeakable horror in intensive farming compounds.

Animals kept in intensive farming sheds, in essence tortured all their life until killed for eating by humans.

Soybean production for intensive farmed animal eating is also destroying the remaining large rainforest of Earth, the Sumatra Indonesia rainforests.

Photo: REUTERS/David Mercado

Brazil's tropical wetland area known as the Pantanal

Animal and plant species in Brazilare becoming extinct due to drought, disease and rainstorms in the Pantanal wetlands and Amazon rainforest

Brazil's tropical wetland area, known as the Pantanal, is seen April 9, 1997.

Animal and plant species in Brazil are dying out as rising world temperatures cause more droughts, disease and rainstorms in areas like the Pantanal wetlands and Amazon rainforest, according to studies released on Tuesday.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

Photo: REUTERS/Gregg Newton

Amazon rain forest

Xingu river

Para

Northern Brazil

Deforested area in the border of Xingu river, 140km from Anapu, state of Para, northern Brazil, in the Amazon rain forest.

The key to using trees to offset global warming is to expand tropical rainforests south of the equator, according to research released in the United States.

Animal and plant species in Brazil are dying out as rising world temperatures cause more droughts, disease and rainstorms in areas like the Pantanal wetlands and Amazon rainforest, according to studies released on Tuesday.

The Amazon Basin, quickly being destroyed, boasts the highest diversity of fish in the world.

Some experts believe that as many as 5000 species of fish, many not yet described and likely to become extinct, live in rivers and streams in the Amazon.

The Brazilian government is sponsoring construction of a 1,100-mile roadway leading from Mato Grosso, the country's top soy-growing state, to the Cargill export terminal.

An estimated 20 per cent of the Amazon rainforest has already been destroyed, and about 6,500 square miles more was lost between 2005 and 2006.

That represented a slight slowing in the rate of destruction from the year before - a trend experts attribute to the weakening of soy bean prices and the strengthening of Brazil's currency on world markets.

Much of the world's soya production goes to feed animals living in unspeakable horror in intensive farming compounds.

Animals kept in intensive farming sheds, in essence tortured all their life until killed for eating by humans.

Soybean production for intensive farmed animal eating is also destroying the remaining large rainforest of Earth, the Sumatra Indonesia rainforests.

Photo: AP

Friday, 21 October 2005

Amazon 'stealth' logging revealed

By Simon Watts

BBC News

An area deforested by soybean farmers is seen in Para, Brazil

Scientists from Brazil and the US say new research suggests deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon has been underestimated by at least 60%.

The team has completed a study using a more advanced technique of satellite imagery that can pick up more types of logging activity.

These include selective logging, where loggers pick out trees of value but leave the surrounding forest intact.

Brazil's government welcomed the report but said the figures were exaggerated.

Nasa's help

Deforestation in the Amazon is on such a massive scale that the only way of measuring it is by using satellites.

The trouble has been that while traditional aerial images can show areas that have been completely destroyed, they do not reveal selective logging of valuable trees such as mahogany.

An area deforested by soybean farmers is seen in Para, Brazil

With input from the Nasa space agency, the joint US and Brazilian team used an ultra-high-resolution technique to examine just how much selective logging was going on.

The report was published in the US journal Science.

The researchers concluded that the area of rainforest destroyed between 1999 and 2002 was thousands of square kilometres bigger than previously thought.

They also found that about 25% more carbon had been released into the atmosphere than estimated  possibly enough to affect climate change.

Brazilian officials praised the scientists for highlighting the issue of selective logging, but said the new figures were hard to believe.

The businessmen involved in the practice claim picking out individual trees is more environmentally friendly than the blanket clearance of huge areas.

But environmental campaigners say that to reach the prized trees, roads have to be built and heavy equipment brought in.

This, they say, can be of no benefit to the Amazon.

(left)

In this photo released by AGECOM, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, left, speaks as Amazonas governor Eduardo Braga, center, listens to him during the opening ceremony of the VI Amazon Environmental Symposium in Amazonas, Brazil, on Friday, July 14, 2006.

The Amazon is experiencing its second year of severe drought.

Top scientists have been delivering much the same message at a floating symposium on the Rio Negro, on whose strange black waters this capital city of the Amazon stands.

They told the meeting  convened on a flotilla of boats by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of the Greek Orthodox Church, dubbed the "green Pope" for his environmental activism  that global warming and deforestation were rapidly pushing the entire enormous area towards a "tipping point", where it would irreversibly start to die.

(right)

Revellers wearing indigenous costumes dance in unison during the Parintins jungle carnival deep in the heart of the Amazon forest July
2, 2006.

Two rival teams named after oxen competed in a spectacle recounting indian tales, local history and the region's cattle ranching roots.

The Carnival-style event began only 41 years ago, but its roots date back to 1913 when roving bands of singers donned bulls costumes and danced in the streets to improvised lyrics.

Photos: AGECOM, REUTERS/Bruno Domingos

Slide cursor underneath or side of photos

Published on Sunday, July 23, 2006 by the lndependent/UK

Dying Forest: One Year to Save the Amazon

Time is running out for the Amazon rainforest. And the fate of the 'lungs of the world' will take your breath away

He pointed out what was happening on Wednesday, standing on an island in a quiet channel of the giant river.

Just a month ago, he explained, it had been entirely under water. Now it was jutting a full 15 feet above it.

It is a sign that severe drought is returning to the Amazon for a second successive year. And that would be ominous indeed.

For new research suggests that just one further dry year beyond that could tip the whole vast forest into a cycle of destruction.

Just the day before, top scientists had been delivering much the same message at a remarkable floating symposium on the Rio Negro, on whose strange black waters this capital city of the Amazon stands.

They told the meeting  convened on a flotilla of boats by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of the Greek Orthodox Church, dubbed the "green Pope" for his environmental activism  that global warming and deforestation were rapidly pushing the entire enormous area towards a "tipping point", where it would irreversibly start to die.

The consequences would be truly awesome. The wet Amazon, the planet's greatest celebration of life, would turn to dry savannah at best, desert at worst.

This would cause much of the world  including Europe  to become hotter and drier, making this sweltering summer a mild foretaste of what is to come. In the longer term, it could make global warming spiral out of control, eventually making the world uninhabitable.

This year the water is draining away even faster than the last one  and there are still more than three months of the dry season to go.

I am very concerned.

Otavio Luz Castello, Mamiraua Reserve, Brazil

Nowhere could seem further from the world's problems than the idyllic spot where Otavio Luz Castello lives. The young naturalist's home is a chain of floating thatched cottages that make up a research station in the Mamiraua Reserve, halfway between here and Brazil's border with Colombia.

Rare pink river dolphin play in the tranquil waters surrounding the cottages, kingfishers dive into them, giant, bright butterflies zig-zag across them and squirrel monkeys romp in the trees on their banks. And an 18ft black caiman answers, literally, to the name of Fred; gliding up to dine abstemiously on sliced white bread when called. There is little to suggest that it may be witnessing the first scenes of an apocalypse.

The waters of the rivers of the Amazon Basin routinely fall by some 30-40 feet- greater than most of the tides of the world's seas  between the wet and dry seasons. But last year they just went on falling in the worst drought in recorded history.

In the Mamiraua Reserve they dropped 51 feet, 15 feet below the usual low level and other areas were more badly affected. At one point in the western Brazilian state of Acre, the world's biggest river shrank so far that it was possible to walk across it. Millions of fish died; thousands of communities, whose only transport was by water, were stranded. And the drying forest caught fire; at one point in September, satellite images spotted 73,000 separate blazes in the basin.

This year, says Otavio Luz Castello, the water is draining away even faster than the last one  and there are still more than three months of the dry season to go. He adds: "I am very concerned."

It is much the same all over Amazonia. In the Jau National Park, 18 hours by boat up the Rio Negro from here, local people who took me out by canoe at dawn found it impossible to get to places they had reached without trouble just the evening before.

The Swiss-flag ship Celerina is loaded with over 50,000 tons of soy for Holland at the Cargill port in Santarem, in the Amazon state of Para, Brazil, May 2, 2006.

When U.S. grain giant Cargill opened a €16 million, US $20 million port in this sleepy Amazon River city three years
ago, it expected to cash in on the rising global demand for soybeans that is Brazil's richest agricultural export.

Acre, extraordinarily, received no rain for 40 days recently, and sandbanks are already beginning to surface in its rivers.

Flying over the forest  with trees in a thousand shades of green stretching, for hour after hour, as far as the eye can see  it seems inconceivable that anything could endanger its verdant immensity.

Until recently, scientists took the same view, seeing it as one of the world's most stable environments.

Though they condemned the way that, on average, an area roughly the size of Wales is cut down each year, this did not seem to endanger the forest as a whole, much less the entire planet.

Now they are changing their minds in the face of increasing evidence that the deforestation is pushing both the Amazon and the world to the brink of disaster.

Dr Antonio Nobre, of Brazil's National Institute of Amazonian Research, told the floating symposium  whose delegates ranged from politicians and environmentalists, to Amazonian Indian shamans and Roman Catholic cardinals  of unpublished research which suggests that the felling is both drying up the entire forest and helping to cause the hurricanes that have been battering the United States and the Caribbean.

The hot, wet Amazon, he explained, normally evaporates vast amounts of water, which rise high into the air as if in an invisible chimney.

This draws in the wet north-East trade winds, which have picked up moisture from the Atlantic.

This in turn controls the temperature of the ocean; as the trade winds pick up the moisture, the warm water that is left gets saltier and sinks.

A forest in the Amazon is seen September 15, 2009 being illegally burnt, near Novo Progresso, in the northern Brazilian state of Para.

Farmers burn the Amazon forest to make it easier to clean big areas that will be turned into grazing lands.

Deforestation disrupts the cycle by weakening the Amazonian evaporation which drives the whole process. One result is that the hot water in the Atlantic stays on the surface and fuels the hurricanes. Another is that less moisture arrives on the trade winds, intensifying drought in the forest. "We believe there is a vicious cycle" says Dr Nobre.

Marina Silva, a fiery former rubber-tapper who is now Brazil's environment minister, described how the Government was finally cracking down on the felling by seizing illegally cut logs, closing down illicit enterprises and fining and imprisoning offenders. As a result, she says, it dropped by 31 per cent last year.

But even so, it has only returned to the levels it was in 2001, still double what it was 10 years before. And it has reached far into the forest after the American multinational Cargill built a huge port for soya three years ago at Santarem, some 400 miles downriver from here.

This encouraged entrepreneurs to cut down the trees to grow the soya.

The symposium flew down en masse to inspect the damage this had caused  vast fields of beans destined to feed supermarket chickens in Europe, where until recently there had been lush, trackless forest.

Priests and community leaders who were campaigning to protect the forest told us how they had received repeated death threats.

What was predicted for 2050 may have begun to happen in 2005

So far about a fifth of the Amazonian rainforest has been razed completely.

Cattle walk along an illegally burnt deforested area near Novo Progresso, in the northern Brazilian state of Para.

Farmers burn the Amazon forest to make it easier to clean big areas that will be turned into grazing lands.

Another 22 per cent has been harmed by logging, allowing the sun to penetrate to the forest floor drying it out.

And if you add these two figures together, the total is growing perilously close to 50 per cent, which computer models predict as the "tipping point" that marks the death of the Amazon.

The models did not expect this to happen until 2050.

But, says Dr Nobre, "what was predicted for 2050, may have begun to happen in 2005."

Nobody knows when the crucial threshold will be passed, but growing numbers of scientists believe that it is coming ever closer.

One of Dr Nobre's colleagues, Dr Philip Fearnside, puts it this way: "With every tree that falls we increase the probability that the tipping point will arrive."

Brazilian politicians say that the country has so many other pressing problems that the destruction is unlikely to be brought under control, unless the world helps to pay for the survival of the forest on which it too depends.

Calculations by Hylton Philipson, a British merchant banker and rainforest campaigner, reckon that it will take $60bn (£32bn) a year, less than a third of the cost of the Iraq war.

The scientists insist there is no time for delay. "If we do not act now", says Dr Fearnside, "we will lose the Amazon forest that helps sustain living conditions throughout the world."

Forest fires in the Jamanxim National Forest, in the Amazonia, Itaituba, Para, northern Brazil in August.

Photo: Greenpeace/Araquem Alcantara

In the past three years, Portugal in Europe has lost 870,000 hectares (2,149,817 acres) of forest to fires. (August 2006)

In northern Portugal, residents of Valongo, near Porto, were reported to be very frightened as flames were approaching their houses.

Forest fires have been burning in Spain and Portugal, which like the rest of Europe is again suffering from drought, a continuation of drought of three years, leaving the countrysides like tinderboxes.

In 2001, for example, IBAMA (the Brazilian Environmental Agency) issued authorization documents for deforestation of 5,342 hectares, but the total deforestation showed by satellite images from INPE (the Brazilian Institute of Space Research) reveals that 523,700 hectares were deforested.

In other words, in 2001 just 1% of the total deforestation area was authorized.

Previous years' data is similar.

This year the water is draining away even faster than the last one  and there are still more than three months of the dry season to go.

I am very concerned.

Otavio Luz Castello, Mamiraua Reserve, Brazil Amazon

Saturday, 15 October 2005

Amazon drought emergency widens

Aerial view Anama lake, Brazil, amid droughtLakes such as the Anama have been drying up in the drought

A worsening drought in the Amazon basin has prompted Brazil to extend an emergency across the Amazonas state.

Brazil's military has been distributing supplies and medicine to tens of thousands of people stranded by the dramatic drop in water levels.

Witnesses say rivers and lakes have dried up completely, leaving behind kilometres of sand and mud.

Environmental campaign group Greenpeace has blamed deforestation and global warming for the drought.

It quoted scientists as saying that the burning of forests has raised temperatures in the Amazon, preventing the formation of clouds.

Brazilian government meteorologists, however, have said the drought is the result of unusually high temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean, that have also been linked to this year's devastating hurricanes.

Airlift lifeline

A state of emergency has been declared in all 61 municipalities of Brazil's Amazonas state as the drought has started affecting towns and cities further downstream, reports the BBC's Tom Gibb in Sao Paolo.

Brazil's armed forces have been delivering water, food and medical supplies to communities isolated by the worst drought in the Amazon for decades.

The air force has been distributing water-purifying chemicals to counter the threat of disease from water supplies contaminated by dead fish in the Amazon.

Low river levels are preventing boats  for many the only means of transport  from using the Amazon safely, leaving communities depending on government airlifts for their survival.

Big ships have been left stranded in the world's second-largest river and millions of fish are rotting in the sun, witnesses say.

Pasture destroyed by flood of the Amazon
River, September 2009

Recent floods and droughts harbingers of troubled future

A field whose pasture was destroyed by this year's flood of the Amazon River, is seen on a cattle ranch in Careiro da Varzea near Manaus, September 4, 2009.

Recent floods and droughts may be harbingers of a troubled future for Brazilian farmers, who worry that climate change could severely disrupt production in one of the world's breadbaskets.

Photo: Amazonaspress/Handout

BBC  Thursday, 2 August 2007

European fires near record levels

Firefighter on the Spanish Canary island of Tenerife, 1 August, 2007

Blistering heat and hot dry winds have fanned the fires

Forests fires that have ravaged southern Europe during the past month were some of the worst on record, the European Commission has said.

More than 3,000 sq km (1,200 sq miles) of forest had already burned this year, almost as much as in the whole of 2006, the commission said.

It warned of more fires in the days ahead, with Spain and Portugal, where temperatures are soaring, most at risk.

Most recently, fires in the Canary Islands have forced thousands to flee.

Firefighters there are continuing to battle two major fires which have razed some 350 sq km (135 sq miles) of land in the last few days.

Experts described the fires on Tenerife and Gran Canaria as an environmental catastrophe. Some 20% of forests have been destroyed, and recovery is expected to take years.

Rapid reaction force

The normal fire season in Europe has only just started but blistering heat and hot dry winds have already fanned wildfires across parts of southern Europe.

A view of the dividing line between the Rio Negro and the Amazon river near Manaus in Brazil.

The Amazon River, South America's largest, has hit its lowest level in the 36 years since records have been kept near
its source in Peru, experts said.

(right)

The dark waters of the Rio Negro meet the muddy waters of the Rio Solimoes at the point where their confluence forms the Amazon River, near the city of Manaus, in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon Basin, October 9, 2005.

Photos: AFP/File/Eric Feferberg, REUTERS/Rickey Rogers

Slide cursor underneath or side of photos

(left)

Aerial view of the Amazon.

(right)

Freshly cut logs from the Amazon rainforest in northern Brazil are seen in this August 18, 2005 photo.

Photos: Unknown, Paulo Whitaker/Reuters

'Save the Amazonsave the climate'

'Stop the deforestationin the Amazon'

Greenpeace activists dressed as cows participate in a protest to raise awareness on the impact of livestock, which they say are mainly responsible for the deforestation of the Amazon, next to Brasilia Cathedral at the Esplanada dos Ministerios in Brasilia September 16, 2009.

The signs read 'Save the Amazon save the climate' and 'Stop the deforestation in the Amazon'.

Farmers burn the Amazon forest to make it easier to clean big areas that will be turned into grazing lands.

Extreme drought in the Amazon rainforest linked to deforestation and climate change

MANAQUIRI, Brazil  The devastating drought currently affecting the Amazon rainforest is part of a vicious cycle created by the combined affects of global warming and deforestation and could cause the collapse of the rainforest, according to scientists from the Large Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia and Greenpeace.

"Brazil is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate changes in the world because of its invaluable biodiversity. If the Amazon loses more than 40% of its forest cover, we will reach a turning point from where we cannot reverse the savannization process of the world's largest forest," said Carlos Nobre, from the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research (INPE) and President of the International Geosphere Biosphere Program (IGBP).

Seventeen per cent of the Amazon has been completely wiped out over the past 30 years, according to INPE, and even more has been damaged by destructive and illegal logging and other human activities.

Life on Earth depends on ancient forests for its survival.

They are the richest most diverse habitats, and help stabilize climate and regulate the weather.

"If the landscape I've seen this week is a sign of things to come, we're in serious trouble. We risk losing the world's largest rainforest, the network of rivers and invaluable and varied life it sustains, much of which we haven't even discovered or researched."

'Stop the deforestationin the Amazon'

A Greenpeace activist dressed as a cow participates in a protest to raise awareness on the impact of livestock, which they say are mainly responsible for the deforestation of the Amazon, next to Brasilia Cathedral at the Esplanada dos Ministerios in Brasilia September 16, 2009.

The signs reads 'Stop the deforestation in the Amazon'.

Farmers burn the Amazon forest to make it easier to clean big areas that will be turned into grazing lands.

Amazonian deforestation and fires account for more than 75% of Brazil's greenhouse gas emissions and place it amongst the top four contributors to global climate change.

"The Amazon is caught between two destructive forces and their combined effects threaten to flip its ecosystems from forest to savannah if measures are not taken to stop deforestation and combat climate change," said Rittl.

Greenpeace is calling on governments to take urgent action to stop deforestation and commit to the massive CO2 reductions needed to protect the Earth's biodiversity and millions of people who are at risk from the impacts of climate change and ancient forest destruction.

Greenpeace has been gathering dramatic images of the worst drought in 40 years in the Amazon this week.

The Amazon River basin is at its lowest level in decades.

Floodplains have dried up and people are walking and using bicycles on areas in which canoes and riverboats used to be the only means of transport.

Large boats have become stuck in the dry mud and the landscape is covered with thousands of rotting dead fish, which are attracting dozens of vultures.

A man rows in Lake Rei filled with dead fish due to a month long drought near Amazon town of Careiro da Varzea, Brazil, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2005.

(right)

An old tire and a dead tree lie on a sand bar exposed by the receding Rio Solimoes river, one of the two biggest tributaries of the Amazon
River, near the city of Manaquiri, in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon Basin October 7, 2005.

New satellite information from Brazil has revealed a sharp increase in the rate of destruction of the Amazonian rainforest.

The information shows the speed of deforestation increased by 40% between 2001 and 2002 to reach its highest rate since 1995.

Figures from the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) show more than 25,000 square kilometres of forest were cleared in a year  mainly for farming.

Environmentalists have expressed alarm at the development which represents a sharp reversal of a trend in which destruction had been slowing.

"The rate of deforestation should be falling, instead the opposite is happening," said Mario Monzoni, a project co-ordinator for Friends of the Earth in Brazil.

AMAZON DEFORESTATION

2002: 9,840 square miles (25,476 sq km) lost

2001: 7,010 square miles (18,166 sq km) lost

Environmental organisations say one major cause is the spread of large-scale soya farming in the southern Amazon.

Soya production is growing rapidly in the area as a crop that offers large profits for farmers and gives a sizable boost to Brazil's trade accounts.

But campaigners also blame the authorities for failing to enforce environmental protection laws.

The country's centre-left government, under the leadership of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, is due to announce new proposals next week to tackle deforestation.

Task ahead

The images show the progression of deforestation in Rondonia, southern Brazil.

Tree-clearing has begun in the 1985 photo, in a typical herringbone pattern fanning out from roads and rivers.

By 1992 it is much more advanced and the town in the centre of the image has grown.

The new Environment Minister, Marina da Silva, who has long campaigned to protect the Amazon, has promised to action but she inherits a difficult situation, says the BBC's Sao Paulo correspondent Tom Gibb.

On the one hand, the country has a new multi-million dollar satellite and radar monitoring system providing plenty of accurate data as to where deforestation is occurring.

But budget cuts on the ground mean that environmental protection agents often do not even have enough money to buy petrol for their boats and cars, let alone mount operations to arrest illegal loggers and farmers, our correspondent says.

Likewise, loopholes and corruption in Brazil's chaotic judicial system mean those caught destroying the forest almost always go unpunished.

The Amazon is the largest rainforest in the world and is home to 30% of all animal and plant life on the planet.

In the last 15 years, 243,000 square kilometres have been deforested, the equivalent of 5% of the Brazilian Amazon.

25 June, 2001

Amazon forest 'could vanish fast'

The giant Amazon otter is one species that depends on the forest

By BBC News Online's environment correspondent Alex Kirby

The destruction of the Amazon rainforest could be irreversible within a decade, according to a US scientist.

James Alcock, of Pennsylvania State University, says the forest could virtually disappear within half a century.

His estimate of the possible rate of destruction is faster than most others and Mr Alcock, professor of environmental sciences at Penn State's Abington College, says the danger lies in a complex feedback process.

Research published in the journal Science earlier this year suggesting that deforestation rates in the Amazon could reach 42% by 2020 were based on unreliable facts and "ecological futurology", Brazil's science and technology ministry said.

Point of no return

But Professor Alcock's forecast, based on a mathematical model of human-driven deforestation, is starker still.

Without immediate and forceful action to change current agricultural, mining and logging practices, he says, the forest could pass the point of no return in 10 to 15 years.

Human pressures on the forest are growing

And the model indicates that the forest, far from having 75 or 100 years to reach total collapse as other researchers predict, could essentially disappear within 40 or 50 years.

Professor Alcock is presenting his findings at a conference in Scotland being held jointly by the Geology Societies of America and London.

He hopes to develop his research with fieldwork in the Amazon, although he argues that his model is also a useful predictor of what could happen in the other great tropical forest systems, in south east Asia and the Congo river basin in Africa.

Professor Alcock, who says the size of the Amazon river basin has already been reduced by about 25%, believes the threat lies in a process known as evapotranspiration, in which the rain that falls on a forest is retained and then returned to the atmosphere.

But without a healthy vegetation base, he says, there is little to stop the water running off, and this creates the potential for a highly unstable forest system.

Risks are close

"Because of the way tropical rainforests work, they are dependent on trees to return water to the air", he said.

"This interdependence of climate and forest means risks to the forests are much closer at hand than we might expect.

"It's a very difficult problem because of several pressures. For example, you can't say: 'Leave the rainforests alone' when people are living in poverty."

Forest loss leaves little in its wake

Professor Alcock says plans to preserve small areas of forest would probably not work, because damage to the overall system would limit the rain necessary for their survival.

Less rain falling on the forest could also increase the likelihood of fires.

Another consequence he foresees is the extinction of many creatures that depend on the forest for survival.

Professor Alcock said: "There are already a large number of species that are endangered, because the forest itself is endangered.

Estimates 'exaggerated'

"We might be able to keep a few animals at the zoos, but we'd surely lose a lot of amphibians, reptiles and insects."

However, Philip Stott, professor of biogeography at the University of London, UK, told BBC News Online: "This model sounds to me to be highly simplistic in political, economic and ecological terms.

"Many scientists believe that deforestation estimates are greatly exaggerated, and that in the Amazon 87% may still be intact  perhaps more.

"There's always a lot of secondary regeneration, and you'd have to take that into account in any modelling."

Tribal groups protest against Amazon rainforest construction

May 2, 2011

Renato Nambikwara, in traditional dress, attends an encampment in front of the Brazilian National Congress building in Brasilia, Brazil, Monday May 2, 2011.

A variety of tribal groups plan to camp out in front of the government building for 5 days as a protest against the construction of the Belo Monte hydroelectric plant in the Amazon rainforest.

Photo: AP/Eraldo Peres

15 May, 2001

Amazon destruction surges

Workers in the Amazon

The destruction of Brazil's Amazon rainforest jumped to a five-year high last year, alarming environmentalists and embarrassing the Brazilian Government.

The government had hoped that forest clearance was decreasing, but satellite images analysed by its Space Research Institute reveal that between 1999 and 2000, almost 20,000 sq km were cleared.

This creates a hole about the size of Belgium, and is a 15% increase on the previous year.

The secretary for Amazon affairs for the Environmental Ministry, Mary Allegretti, blamed the increased deforestation on an improved economic climate.

Demand for land

Rainforest destruction

If the Amazon disappears, much of the planet's wildlife will lose its habitat

An unexpectedly healthy recovery from Brazil's recession, following the devaluation of its currency in January 1999, sparked more demand for timber and land.

Ms Allegretti said the rain forest was cut down by logging companies and farmers in search of land.

Independent research institutes forecast that if the government continues with its road building and farming programmes in the Amazon region, up to 40% of the total rainforest will be destroyed within 20 years.

Environmentalists say action needs to be taken to reverse the unsustainable destruction of the Amazon, which is home to up to 30% of the world's animal and plant life.

"The beginning of the new millennium could not have been worse for the Amazon, the figures are worrying if we look to the future," said the World Wildlife Fund in a statement.

Ms Allegretti said the government would introduce a licensing system for properties where deforestation was worst.

Government action

Brazilian police chase landless rural workers in the Amazon city of Belem, north of San Paulo

Brazilian police clash with the Landless Rural Workers movement

But our correspondent Jan Rocha says that within the next two weeks a controversial bill which would allow Amazon farmers to legally clear much greater areas of forest will be debated in Congress.

The bill is supported by farmers and opposed by environmentalists, she says.

The government is also considering building more energy plants in the area, as the country is suffering from a chronic energy shortage.

In 1970, about 99% of the Amazon, which is sometimes termed the "lungs of the planet", due to the huge amounts of oxygen produced by its trees, was still standing.

In 2001, for example, IBAMA (the Brazilian Environmental Agency) issued authorisation documents for deforestation of 5,342 hectares, but the total deforestation showed by satellite images from INPE (the Brazilian Institute of Space Research) reveals that 523,700 hectares were deforested.

In other words, in 2001 just 1% of the total deforestation area was authorized.

Deforestation  which environmentalists say is one of the most pressing concerns affecting the planet  will top the agenda at a United Nations meeting of environment ministers in New York on Monday.

Mexico is one of the world's worst affected countries. Depletion of forest cover is taking place twice as fast than previously thought, with more than one million hectares being lost each year.

A number of initiatives to resolve the problem  including the eviction of illegal settlers from protected forest land  have been announced by President Vicente Fox.

But environmentalists say the settlers are just a scapegoat and the government is ignoring the real problem, illegal wood cutting.

According to a recently published government report, Mexico now has the second fastest rate of deforestation in the world, second only to Brazil.

Nowhere is the deforestation worse than in the southern state of Chiapas.

The forests around the town have been devastated by small scale logging

Ryan Zinn, development worker

In the south east corner of Chiapas lies the Lacandon jungle, a million hectares of, until recently, pristine tropical forest.

It's one of the most biologically diverse places on the planet home to rare parrots, jaguars and hundreds of species of hardwood trees.

From the air the damage caused by logging and illegal farming settlements is plain to see. The light coloured maize fields form a patchwork amongst the bottle green expanse of tropical forest.

"The farmers here have no right to the land, it is a reserve," state government forestry advisor Hernan Alfonzo told me as we come in to land at a small airstrip cut out of the jungle

"It's not just the land they grow crops on that's lost," he said. "Thousands of hectares of forest go up in smoke every year as the fires they light to clear their land rage out of control."

Suspicion

The jungle is in an area of high biodiversity

Landing at the hamlet of San Gregorio we are greeted with understandable suspicion by the inhabitants.

San Gregorio is home to 50 families.

Until 20 years ago they were farm labourers working in the north of the state, but they lost their jobs when much of the area was turned over to cattle raising and their labour was no longer needed.

"The people here are threatened by the government with eviction all the time," said Antonio Jimenez, who heads an organisation representing the forest farmers.

"They literally have nowhere else to go, and they don't create the environmental havoc the government says they do, they protect the environment, it's in their interests to do so," he added.

The claim is backed up by environmentalists working in the area.

"The farmers here are cultivating in a sustainable way," said botanist Miguel Angel Garcia.

"They no longer need to destroy more and more of the forest because their fields remain productive."

'Smokescreen'

There is a growing body of opinion that the government's focus on removing the settlers from their land is simply a smokescreen deflecting attention from the widespread illegal logging going on across the country.

Development worker Ryan Zinn working near the town of San Cristobal has been studying the problem.

"The forests around the town have been devastated by small scale logging concessions," he told me, as we stood in a recently cut area of the forest.

"The municipal governments hand out permits illegally to local consortia.

In many cases what we see are not huge logging companies but the middle men of the intermediaries who are causing much of the deforestation," Mr Zinn said.

Huge task

It's a problem the federal government acknowledges.

"We're working to bring an end to the corruption," said Hernan Alfonzo.

"Corruption has been endemic amongst officials because of the low salaries of the inspectors and the big profits to be made.

Illegal logging is on the increase

"We're now putting in place teams of new inspectors to check all the wood leaving the state," he added.

This, however is a massive task. The agency has just a hundred inspectors having to cover an area of about a hundred thousand square miles.

Even if the will to protect the environment in this part of southern Mexico is there, the finance to bring about change is lagging far behind.

Devastating UN report showing explosive urban sprawl, major deforestation and the sucking dry of inland seas over less than three decades.

The destruction of swathes of mangroves in the Gulf of Fonseca off Honduras to make way for extensive shrimp farms shows up clearly.

The atlas makes the point that not only has it left the estuary bereft of the natural coastal defence provided by the mangroves, but the shrimp themselves have been linked to pollution and widespread damage to the area's eco-system.

"These illustrate some of the changes we have made to our environment," Kaveh Zahedi UN expert.

"Cities pull in huge amounts of resources including water, food, timber, metals and people. They export large amounts of wastes including household and industrial wastes, wastewater and the gases linked with global warming," UN Environment Programme chief Klaus Toepfer.

"Thus their impacts stretch beyond their physical borders affecting countries, regions and the planet as a whole."

The Indonesian island of Sumatra is the sixth largest island in the world and once boasted some of the most extensive and richest areas of tropical rainforest anywhere on the planet  but no longer.

It is estimated 60% of the total forest cover has been destroyed over the past 100 years, with the rate of destruction increasing rapidly in the 1970s and 80s under the authoritarian regime of former President Suharto.

His government was particularly keen on dividing up vast areas of the country's forests into concessions given to powerful businessmen to log and convert into rubber and palm-oil plantations.

Every day up to 350 lorries have been travelling along this road. I believe 100 of them contain illegal logs from Tesso Nilo

WWF official

This along with the resettlement of millions of people from over-crowded Java to islands such as Sumatra and Borneo, all of whom needed land to farm, saw deforestation reach unprecedented levels.

Today it is estimated around two million hectares (five million acres) of Indonesian forest are lost every year  an area equivalent to the size of Belgium.

And the majority of the logging is believed to be illegal.

Race against time

In Sumatra environmentalists are now fighting a desperate battle to save the last substantial part of the lowland forest still standing.

Sumatran tigers are under threat

The forest in Riau province is called Tesso Nilo and organisations such as the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) believe it is critical it is turned into a special conservation area.

"This lowland forest is the prime habitat of the Sumatran tiger, elephants and other important species," said Nazir Foead of WWF Indonesia.

"If Tesso Nilo forest goes, then the chances of survival for these endangered species will be very, very slim."

Unparalleled diversity

On top of this, recent research commissioned by WWF discovered that Tesso Nilo has the highest level of biodiversity on earth.

Scientists found more than 200 vascular plant species in just 200 square metres of forest  far more even than in the Amazon.

I will not ask my people to stop the logging. I will tell them to carry on, as long as these companies are getting our wood, then why should we stop?

Village chief Mohammed Hatta

But time is fast running out for the world's richest forest which presently occupies an area of just 1,500 square kilometres (579 square miles).

If the current rate of logging continues, it will have disappeared within the next four years.

Driving into the area it is easy to see why. A major road has been built through the forest making it easy to access the timber.

Every few minutes lorries laden with logs groan along the road belching diesel fumes into the atmosphere.

"Every day up to 350 lorries have been travelling along this road," said one WWF official who has been monitoring the logging here.

"I believe 100 of them contain illegal logs from Tesso Nilo."

Easy money

We drove further into the forest and soon could hear the sound of chainsaws in the distance.

The illegal loggers are a mixture of local villagers and gangs of people who have come from further afield, generally from other provinces in Sumatra.

What they have in common is poverty. The case of Kamarudin, a local villager, is typical. We followed him as he slashed his way deep into the forest, with his chainsaw balanced on his shoulder.

A constant stream of trucks take the trees for pulping

It did not take him long to find what he wanted  a large tropical hardwood tree called Meranti. The tree, which took decades to grow, came crashing to the ground within a couple of minutes.

"Chopping down trees like this hardwood Meranti, I can earn $60 a week," he said. "Much more than the rubber plantation where I used to work where the money wasn't enough to feed my family."

Local anger

We went back to Kamarudin's village in the middle of the forest  a desperately poor area.

More and more villagers have been turning to illegal logging over the last five years since the Asian economic crisis hit Indonesia.

According to the village head, Mohammed Hatta, it will not be long before more than half the families here are involved in chopping down wood.

Mr Hatta is actively encouraging this because he believes his people have the right to do so, as he says the land is theirs.

Such a direct challenge to the authorities would have been unthinkable under the repressive regime of former President Suharto. But since the advent of democracy in 1998 local communities have been asserting themselves much more.

Mr Hatta is angry that over the years the government has given the rights to the whole of Tesso Nilo forest to several logging and plantation companies.

"I will not ask my people to stop the logging," he said, "I will tell them to carry on, as long as these companies are getting our wood, then why should we stop?"

The loggers are driven by poverty

Massive operation

The scale of the main forestry industries in the area is breath-taking. We visited the Riau Andalan Pulp and Paper company (RAPP) on the outskirts of the forest, one of two such businesses based in the province.

It is a huge, hi-tech industrial complex housing the world's largest pulp mill. It produces almost two million tons of pulp every year, consuming eight million tons of wood in the process.

It is a non-stop operation. The mill operates 24-hours a day, with a never-ending convoy of trucks arriving at the factory to supply the wood.

Back in 1993 the government gave RAAP a concession of around 3,000 sq km which it could log and then re-plant with acacia trees.

Part of this concession lies within the Tesso Nilo forest itself.

No guarantees

A spokesman for the company told the BBC the forest it was given to convert to acacia plantations was already degraded  in other words had already been substantially logged.

But WWF says this is wrong, "RAPP is chopping down primary rain-forest," said Mr Foead.

The company is trying to promote itself as environment-friendly because it says within six years it will have planted enough acacia trees to provide a sustainable source of wood for the pulp mill.

Ironically it can only do this by first destroying swathes of Sumatran rain-forest.

Environmentalists also believe illegal logs from Tesso Nilo are being sold to RAPP. The capacity of the mill is so huge that around one-fifth of the wood supply is provided by outside contractors.

The company says there are stringent checks on the sources of logs provided by these contractors, but admits it cannot guarantee all the wood is legal.

WWF remains optimistic it can save Tesso Nilo from the loggers by persuading the government to turn it into a national park. But it will be an uphill struggle.

Indonesia's Forestry Minister Mohammad Prakosa told the BBC he could not simply revoke the licences given to the companies which had been given the right to log the area.

And even if Tesso Nilo did become a national park, it would still not be safe from the illegal loggers.

The experience in Indonesia's other national parks has been that illegal logging has continued unabated as law enforcement across the country is so weak, not least because the police and other officials are notoriously corrupt.

The huge expanse of western Siberia is thawing for the first time since its formation, 11,000 years ago.

This could potentially act as a tipping point, causing global warming to snowball, scientists fear.

More than 90% of the original national forest cover has now been lost.

The situation is an "ecological landslide that is probably irreversible and is undoubtedly connected to climatic warming," researcher Sergei Kirpotin, of Tomsk State University, Russia, told New Scientist magazine.

The whole western Siberian sub-Arctic region has started to thaw, he added, and this "has all happened in the last three or four years".

The huge expanse of western Siberia is thawing for the first time since its formation, 11,000 years ago.

This could potentially act as a tipping point, causing global warming to snowball, scientists fear.

More than 90% of the original national forest cover has now been lost.

The situation is an "ecological landslide that is probably irreversible and is undoubtedly connected to climatic warming," researcher Sergei Kirpotin, of Tomsk State University, Russia, told New Scientist magazine.

The whole western Siberian sub-Arctic region has started to thaw, he added, and this "has all happened in the last three or four years".